Aaron Judge, Max Fried led the Yankees to series against Rays

While Aron Judge leads in many typing categories, Max Fried is at the top of several pitch areas for New York Yankees.
The judge takes a better average of the major leagues.
The average of the judge is greater than 0.400 for eight games, and he is on a sequence of 27 games in base. The judge struck his 10th circuit and reached the base four times on Wednesday – the sixth time he did this season – while the Yankees won a 5-4 defeat at Baltimore Orioles.
The judge dominated in three of his last four games and has six of his 32 points produced during this period. The judge is tied with Cal Raleigh de Seattle and Eugenio Suarez of Arizona for the head of the major league in the circuits, he shares the head of the RBI of the League with the Los Angeles voltiseur, Teoscar Hernandez, and his 50 strokes are also at the top of the majors.
“It’s remarkable,” said Yankees manager Aaron Boone. “Obviously, I always say that we lack superlatives or things to say about it, but what he does is simply incredible in every game.”
Fried (5-0, 1.19 ERA) dominates the mound, similar to the judge on the plate, and is equal for lead al with Tyler Mahle of Texas at the time. He is also tied with Brandon Pfaadt from Arizona and Nick Pivetta de San Diego for the most victories in the majors and keeps the strikers at an average of .207. Fried has granted two points deserved or less to each departure; He granted an unprecedented race on five strokes in six heats in match 1 of the Sunday double head against the Blue Jays in Toronto.
“I think there is a round with each departure he passes, then rolls after that,” said New York Austin Wells recipient about Fried. “This is why he was so successful. This is why he is here.”
Fried faces the Rays for the second time in three departures and is 3-0 with an MPM of 0.42 in three career starts against them. He granted two strokes in 7 2/3 innings on April 20 in Tampa – the first to come when an official score decision on a balloon struck by Chandler Simpson was changed to a mistake before the start of the eighth.
The Rays lost three of the four against the Yankees two weekends ago and followed a sequence of five consecutive victories by being ahead of 14-3 in a scan of three games by the Royals of Kansas City visiting.
After being hit in the seventh Wednesday, the Rays granted a pair of three -point heats and granted 15 strokes while their attack could not keep the pace. Yandy Diaz dominated and Simpson succeeded two strokes, but the Rays were 1 for 18 with runners in the notation position during the series.
“We did not have the blows when the successes were really important,” said Tampa Bay’s second goal, Brandon Lowe. “I can’t really talk more than that.”
Ryan Pepiot (2-3, 4.24) will oppose Fried for the second time this season after granting three points on six strokes in six heats in their previous match. He followed his release against the Yankees by granting a point on three strokes in six rounds to win the victory on Saturday in San Diego.
Pepiot has a 1-1 file with an MPM of 3.09 in two career starts against the Yankees, which he has not yet faced in New York.
– field level media


